Shelby American didn't last long, but it was a flame that burned
incandescently before being extinguished by corporate politics. In less
than a decade, it created a legacy that will be revered as long as cars
still roar around racetracks. Now, on the sixtieth anniversary of the
founding of this iconic company, Shelby American: The Renegades Who
Built the Cars, Won the Races, and Lived the Legend relates how the
saga unfolded, as told by the men and women who were there.
Although Carroll Shelby was the focal point of the publicity his company
generated, Shelby American was staffed by a who's who of racing royalty,
from Phil Remington and Ken Miles to Peter Brock and Carroll Smith. And
while the shop is often depicted as a menagerie of Southern California
hot-rodders, it also embraced mechanics and fabricators from Canada,
England, Switzerland, Australia, and New Zealand. Like the Cobra itself,
the company magically came together as a whole that was greater than its
constituent parts.
By incorporating the recollections of dozens of lesser-known crewmen,
Shelby American goes behind the scenes to tell long untold and
misunderstood stories--the cheat embedded in the turbine Indy car, the
oiling woes that sunk the tunnel-port Trans-Am Mustang, even details
about the build of the first Cobra in Dean Moon's cramped garage in
Santa Fe Springs. The book also delves into the personalities and
hijinks that made Shelby American such a vibrant place to work, whether
team members were transforming humdrum Mustangs into race-ready GT350s
or staging shop battles with cherry bombs and M-80s.
Always standing above it all was a tall Texan. Dynamic, charismatic,
mercurial, mercenary, and a little bit dangerous, Shelby had to fight
Ford bean counters as fiercely as he dueled with Enzo Ferrari. But for a
few miraculous years, Shelby managed to beat both of them at their own
games.